Orange County residents describe deadly plane crash

Firefighters douse flames Sunday after the plane crashed in Yorba Linda. Five people were killed.

Firefighters douse flames Sunday after the plane crashed in Yorba Linda. Five people were killed.

Photo: Alex Gallardo / Associated Press

Photo: Alex Gallardo / Associated Press

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Firefighters douse flames Sunday after the plane crashed in Yorba Linda. Five people were killed.

Firefighters douse flames Sunday after the plane crashed in Yorba Linda. Five people were killed.

Photo: Alex Gallardo / Associated Press

Orange County residents describe deadly plane crash

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YORBA LINDA, Orange County — Dave Elfver was getting ready to go to a friend’s house to watch the Super Bowl when he heard a whining sound in his Southern California neighborhood “like a motorcycle going a hundred miles per hour.”

Then, he said, came the explosion from a twin-engine plane that broke apart in flight and crashed, setting a home on fire in the Los Angeles suburb of Yorba Linda, killing five people and injuring two.

“The whole house shook. I thought it was an earthquake, but the whining sound didn’t make any sense.”

Elfver, 75, said he went to his backyard and saw a house engulfed in flames. He ran toward it along with a crowd of neighbors, and only then he saw an airplane wing in the street. “I didn’t realize what it was until I ran around the corner,” he said Monday.

Across the street, one of the columns of a neighbor’s home had collapsed and debris from the plane was strewn throughout the street. Another home had broken windows.

The four people on the ground who died were all in the house that burned. The pilot was also killed and was the only person on the plane, said Sheriff’s Lt. Cory Martino.

Martino said the dead occupants of the home were two males and two females but he did not further identify them.

The Cessna 414A, which can carry up to eight people, took off from the Fullerton Municipal Airport about 12 miles west of the blaze, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Allen Kenitzer said.

According to preliminary radar data, the plane reached an altitude of about 7,800 feet and then made a rapid descent, said Eliott Simpson, an aviation accident investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board.

The debris field spanned about four blocks, he said.

The main cabin of the airplane and one engine came to rest at the bottom of a ravine in the backyard of a house and the other engine landed on a street, creating a hole, Simpson said.

“During the impact sequence one house caught fire and that’s where we have the four fatalities,” he said.

It was not immediately clear what set the two-story house ablaze. The property where the fuselage ended up is about three houses down from the home that burned.

Shawn Winch, 49, said he was out in his backyard when he heard a loud sound.

“It sounded like a missile coming at my house,” he said.

He said he saw the plane veer off and debris falling.

“It wasn’t intact,” he said of the plane as it was coming toward the neighborhood. “It was already breaking up.”

Some residents tried to run into the flaming house but explosion sounds came from its garage and other neighbors called them off, Winch said.

“It was a boom. It sounded like something exploded. It shook our house,” said John Wolbart, who lives a block away.

Pat Rogers, who lives about a mile from the crash site, told the Orange County Register he saw the plane on fire and coming apart.